Palm Springs Review: Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti s whimsical chemistry results in unconventional romcom take pinkvilla.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pinkvilla.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Let Him Go: Diane Lane as Margaret Blackledge and Kevin Costner as George Blackledge Damon Smith
Space Dogs: Return To Earth: Strelka (voiced by Mauriett Chayeb-Mendez) and Belka (Maria Antonieta Monge)
FILM OF THE WEEK
LET HIM GO (Cert 15, 114 mins, Universal Pictures (UK) Ltd, Thriller/Romance, available from April 12 on Amazon Prime Video/BT TV Store/iTunes/Sky Store/TalkTalk TV Store and other download and streaming services, available from April 26 on DVD £19.99/Blu-ray £26.99)
Starring: Diane Lane, Kevin Costner, Lesley Manville, Kayli Carter, Will Brittain, Booboo Stewart, Ryan Bruce, Bram Hornung, Otto Hornung.
RETIRED sheriff George Blackledge (Kevin Costner) and his horse trainer wife Margaret (Diane Lane) live on a ranch in 1960s Montana with their 25-year-old son James (Ryan Bruce), his wife Lorna (Kayli Carter) and their grandson Jimmy (Bram and Otto Hornung).
Movie Review: Palm Springs is quirky comedy with Groundhog Day premise
Siskiyou Daily News
“Palm Springs” is a strange, quirky and raunchy comedy that takes a familiar concept and makes it its own.
It takes the basic plot of the Bill Murray classic “Groundhog Day,” where a day is repeated over and over again for infinity for a person, or in this case persons, but adds its own unique sensibilities to the genre. Palm Springs,” which is well directed by Max Barbakow, is elevated by standout performances by Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti as two people who are trapped for what appears to be – for all eternity – stuck each day on Nov. 9 at a wedding.
18 Things We Learned from the Palm Springs Commentary Here s the ending. No one knows what it means.
Hulu where we sit and listen to filmmakers talk about their work, then share the most interesting parts. In this edition, Rob Hunter discovers a streamer getting into the commentary game with their biggest hit of 2020.
Commentary tracks are a physical media treat, something that in the right hands (and vocal chords) can deliver insight and entertainment to viewers on some of their favorite films. They’re not as common these days, unfortunately, as studios and distributors grow less interested in releasing Blu-rays and more focused on streaming, but the fine folks at Hulu recently bridged that gap with one of their most acclaimed originals from 2020,
MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM: 4 STARS It’s hard not to watch “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” the vibrant adaptation of August Wilson’s play of the same name, now streaming on Netflix, without feeling a sense of loss. It’s Chadwick Boseman’s last performance and the life he brings to the role of ambitious trumpet player Levee acts as a poignant reminder of a career cut tragically short. Set in the roaring 1920’s Chicago, Viola Davis plays the titular character, a real-life musical trailblazer known as Mother of the Blues. On a sweltering day in a dank basement recording studio, the band, pianist Toledo (Glynn Turman), trombonist Cutler (Colman Domingo), and string bassist Slow Drag (Michael Potts) and Levee, rehearse as they wait for the fashionably late Ma to arrive.